Anchor automatically adds curly braces and semicolons to code written in various programming languages, saving typing and making programs easier to read. It lets you pretend to be coding in Python or Lua while actually writing standard C, Java, PHP, C++, .NET, C#, or D. A script may generate files in the target language and invoke the compiler. An example bash script integrates with TCC to make runnable "scripts" with the speed of C. The scripts are easily modified to target another compiler or interpreter.

AppLogger is a library that allows an application programmer to provide run-time customizable output from an application. It includes a function, applogger_log(), with calling semantics analogous to the standard C library's printf(), but with extra arguments to specify a classification for the output message. Calls to applogger_log() thus specify the classification and text of a message; calls to other functions in the AppLogger library determine the real-time policy applogger_log() applies to messages of a given classification: print to file, send over a network socket, ignore the message, etc. In short, AppLogger allows for the separation of message content and message output policy in an application.

The ArchLinux Development Stack provides a whole stack of applications needed to support development projects during their life cycle on ArchLinux servers. The packages include Nexus, Sonar, Hudson, and Redmine.

BitNami Apache Solr Stack is an easy-to-install environment for developing and deploying Java applications. It includes pre-configured, ready-to-run versions of Apache and Java so users can get the environment up and running in minutes after answering a few questions. Windows, Linux, Linux 64, and Mac OS X operating systems are supported. It includes Apache Solr, a fast enterprise search platform from the Apache Lucene project. Its major features include powerful full-text search, hit highlighting, faceted search, dynamic clustering, database integration, rich document (e.g., Word, PDF) handling, and geospatial search.

BitNami Jenkins Stack is an easy-to-install distribution of the Jenkins application. It includes pre-configured, ready-to-run versions of Tomcat and Java, so users can get a Jenkins installation up and running in minutes after answering a few questions. Jenkins, previously known as Hudson, is a continuous integration server. Built with Java, it provides over 400 plugins to support building and testing virtually any project. It supports SCM tools including CVS, Subversion, Git, Mercurial, Perforce, and Clearcase, and can execute Apache Ant and Apache Maven-based projects, as well as arbitrary shell scripts and Windows batch commands. It can also monitor executions of remote tasks.

Boscli is a framework to create interactive command line interfaces. It is meant to help developers write interactive shells for domain specific tasks. It provides an easy way to wrap and join together command line apps and utilities and create specific shells with security levels and modes, history, auto-completion, and so on. Using this framework any developer can build an interactive command line interface for configuration or monitor an appliance in a few minutes. Boscli can be used as a "glue code" for an appliance's interface or to create a "homogeneous" administration interface for different systems and applications.

BullDoc is a Web application for documentation building. It is generally desgined for projects developed with PHP and which use SVN or another source control system. It stores the documentation sources in the same repository as the code. The sources should be text files, so SVN can track changes and allow BullDoc to always extract a documentation version appropriate to the code. It makes it convenient to view the result of authoring by opening a page in a Web browser, without additional compiling. It also allows you to edit text directly in the Web browser.

C-DynaLib is a Perl module that allows Perl programs to call C functions in dynamic libraries. It is useful for testing library functions, writing simple programs without the bother of XS, and generating C function pointers that call Perl code. If you have a C compiler that Perl supports, you will get better results by writing XSubs than by using this module.